RESUMEN
Targeted protein degradation via proteasomal and lysosomal pathways is a promising therapeutic approach, and proteins in cytoplasm or on the cell membrane can be easily contacted and have become the major targets. However, degradation of disease-related proteins that exist in membrane-bound organelles (MBO) such as the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) remains unsolved due to the membrane limits. Here we describe a DNA nanodevice that shows ER targeting capacity and undergoes new intracellular degradation via the autophagy-dependent pathway. Then the DNA nanostructure functionalized with specific ligands is used to selectively catch ER-localized proteins and then transport them to the lysosome for degradation. Through this technique, the degradation of both exogenous ER-resident protein (ER-eGFP) and endogenous overexpressed molecular chaperone (glucose-regulated protein 78) in cancer cells has been successfully executed with high efficiency.